This suit was heard upon a “Statement of Agreed Facts.”
The trial judge entered an interlocutory decree that each plaintiff might recover, leaving the amounts to be determined at further hearings. He then stayed further proceedings and reported “the question” to this court. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 214, § 30.
But although the bond cannot take effect as a statutory bond, it is valid as the basis of a common law obligation,
This paragraph was obviously intended to give direct contract rights to subcontractors and others who came within its terms to the same extent as if it had been originally given' to them and they had been originally named in it. The bond constituted a standing offer of security to all who, in reliance upon it, should accept the offer by bringing themselves within its terms through the actual furnishing of material or the performing of labor or the renting or hiring out of appliances or equipment used or employed in the execution of the contract. In Saunders v. Saunders,
The surety relies upon the case of Central Supply Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
The argument has been pressed that the plaintiffs cannot succeed because of the Massachusetts rule that a third person cannot sue on a contract to which he is not himself a party. Mellen v. Whipple,
The view we take makes it unnecessary to consider whether the plaintiffs might prevail on the alternative ground that under the wording of the bond the housing authority held the obligation of the contractor and the surety in trust for their benefit. See Krell v. Codman,
The claim of New Bedford Gas and Edison Light Co., part of which is “for the installation of transformers” and part “for the furnishing of electricity in connection with” the contract, requires separate comment. The question is whether this claimant comes within the words, “who may furnish any material or perform any labor for or on account of said contract, or rent or hire out any appliances or equipment used or employed in the execution of said contract.” Whether the transformers became part of the completed project or were merely hired during the progress of the work does not clearly appear, but in view of the breadth of the language just quoted, and construing the agreed facts with regard to their context, we are of opinion that the item for transformers should be taken to be either for labor performed and material furnished “for or on account” of the principal contract or for “appliances or equipment” rented or hired out and “used or employed” in the execution of the con
We cannot, however, go to the length of including the claim of Liberty Mutual Insurance Company for premiums on a workmen’s compensation policy. Bay State Dredging & Contracting Co. v. W. H. Ellis & Son Co.
The result is that the interlocutory decree is to be modified by excepting therefrom the Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, and -as so modified is affirmed. A decree is to be entered dismissing the intervening petition of Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.
Ordered accordingly.
